5 Fla. 185 | Fla. | 1853
Two questions are presented by this record for the consideration of the Court. The appellant, Luke, was indicted under the Act of-1832, for malicious mischief, in killing sundry mules, the property of Joseph M. Hernandez.
The only evidence ¿gainst the prisoner, as appears by the bill of exceptions, was his own admission, that he had killed the cattle by the direction and command of his master, because of their having trespassed upon the plantation of the latter. Upon this evidence, the counsel for the prisoner prayed the instruction of the Court below to the jury —that the prisoner had committed no act for which he could be criminally punished, for that the shooting of said mules as charged in the indictment, was not done maliciously,
The 2d error is upon the judgment rendered in the Court below. The jury having found the prisoner guilty, assessed the punishment under the 59th section of the Act of February 10, 1832, (Thomp. Dig.,) at three months imprisonment, and the Court entered judgment upon the verdict that the prisoner be imprisoned in tbe common jail of Sts John’s County for the space of three calendar months, according to the verdict of the jury, and pay the costs of suit, and stand committed until the sentence be fully executed.
It is now alleged, that the prisoner could not be tried and punished under the Act of February 10,1832, but only under tbe 61st section of the Act of November 21, 1828, Thomp. Dig., 541.
The first error assigned, presents one of the most interesting questions which can arise out of the institution of slavery as known to, and recognized by, our laws but as tbe decision of tbe question so presented is not absolutely necessary to tbe disposition of the case, we pass it over without expressing or even intimating any opinion thereon, in the hope that if it is ever again presented for adjudication, we may be enabled to give to it that consideration and reflection which its interest and importance demand, and which the present limited term of this Court here, will not permit. It is urged by the counsel for appellant, upon the second error assigned, that the Legislature evidently intended to discriminate between white persons, and slaves and free persons of color, as well in the mode as in the degree of punishment, to be inflicted for tbe infraction of tbe penal laws. That in 1828, two Acts were passed, that of tbe 22d November, 1828, entitled An Act relating to crimes and
A careful review of the legislation of the State must lead to the conclusion that it was intended to establish and preserve a distinction between the punishments to be inflicted on slaves and free persons of color, and those on white persons for the same violations of the criminal law. The two Acts passed in the year 1828, should he taken and construed together as one statute, and as creating the distinction alluded to. Thus the offences of assault, assault and battery, with or without the intent to kill or murder, were; by tbe Act of November 22, 1828, punished by a fine, at tbe discretion of tbe jury, the utmost extent or limit of the mulct being one thousand dollars; while the same offences committed by a slave or colored freeman upon, a white person, are punished more severely by the Act of Nov.
This general Act, however, was repealed by the subsequent general statute, entitled An Act relating to crimes and misdemeanors, approved February 10, 1832; and it is
The Act of November 21, 1828, being unaffected by the subsequent Act of February 10,1832, is in full force and vigor, and slaves, free negroes and mulattocs are to be tried and punished according to its provisions. They may be guilty of many of the infractions of the penal laws of the State, of which the white persons may be guilty ; and hence, if the general statute creates a new offence, before unknown to the common law, if it is one which a slavo or
And it is accordingly ordered, that the judgment of the Circuit Court be reversed, vacated and s,et aside.